Episode Transcript
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Speaker 1 (00:00):
The following is a paid podcast. iHeartRadio's hosting of this
podcast constitutes neither an endorsement of the products offered or
the ideas expressed.
Speaker 2 (00:09):
For cancer treatment. Most prefer effective, non invasive, well tolerated,
outpatient therapy. That's doctor Liederman, the radio surgery pioneer's goal too.
Doctor Liederman is first in America, first in New York,
First for you with body radiosurgery. Doctor Liderman hits your
cancer with no cutting, no bleeding. Doctor Liederman has decades
of experience with primary and metastatic large or small cancers
(00:32):
from head to toe cancer treatment with possibly a second
chance for you even if chemo radiation or surgery didn't
work or isn't tolerated. Goals are your best results and
quality of life. Meet doctor Liderman to hit the cancer.
He's New York's only Harvard trained Triple Board certified radiation oncologist.
Call two one two choices two one two choices to
(00:54):
meet doctor Liderman for a fresh second opinion. Most insurances Medicare,
Medicaid accepted. Free book with DVD two super convenient Broadway
in thirty eighth in Manhattan. Meet doctor Liderman to hit
your cancer. Call two one two choices two one two choices.
Speaker 3 (01:09):
Prostate cancer very common. Men's cancer worldwide will double by
twenty forty Thirty five thousand men die here annually from
prostate cancer. What to do? It's doctor Liderman with new news.
New data reveals testing reduces prostate cancer death by twenty percent.
Men's skipping testing have forty five percent more death from
(01:31):
prostate cancer. What to do? Come for prostate cancer screening
at Radio Surgery in New York with doctor Liederman. Easy
to save lives, reduce prostate cancer death, possibly yours or
your loved one. How visit Doctor Liederman thirteen eighty four
Broadway Call two and two choices. Most insurances, Medicare, Medicaid accepted.
(01:54):
It's easy with doctor Liederman, New York's only Harvard trained
Triple Board certified Radiation on college called Doctor Leederman two
and two choices. It's easy with doctor Liederman, trying to
save lives called Doctor Leiderman two and two choices.
Speaker 4 (02:17):
Welcome everybody. It's the Radio Surgery Show with Doctor Gil Leiderman, MD,
New York's only Harvard trained, Triple Board certified radiation oncologist
who brings you the latest cancer treatment news, interviewing world
renowned cancer experts, delving to special cases, and of course
answering your questions. I'm Rob Redstone, broadcasting from the WR
(02:41):
Studios in the heart of New York City, and now
please welcome doctor Leaderman.
Speaker 3 (02:48):
Thank you Rob, and thank you Noah, and thank you
for tuning in today and every day, every day we're
here on the radio, and every day we're informing. We're
talking about people just like you, probably who never thought
they'd have cancer, who never thought we'd meet, and then
all of a sudden for one reason or another, and
that we're going to explain in the next hour why
people come, and what happens when they come, and where
(03:10):
they've been before, and what's the result of it all,
and why listen. Well, number one, we're not selling anything,
so you keep your hand off your wallet. We're only informing.
We're trying to educate so you get better healthcare for
yourself and your loved one, your family, your friends, and
even the person down the street. And you'll be so
informed that you will tell people who are wondering, oh,
(03:33):
I've got cancer, I don't know what to do. They
want to cut off my arm or my lung, or
my breast, or my kidney, or my prostate, or my bladder,
or my colon or my lung or wherever my nose
or my ear. They want to cut it off. They
want to do that. They want to give me chemo
for the rest of my life. Well, we've all heard that.
I hear that sad to say every day because many
of my patients come from other places that are eager
(03:57):
to give chemo, it seems, and eager to do surgery.
It seems often not to inform people of all the options,
options that are hidden from so many patients. And that's
what I do every day. Min's doctor Gil Liederman. I'm
a board certified radiation doctor trained at Harvard Medical School.
I'm going to introduce myself later, but I do want
(04:17):
to jump in and start talking about patients. And these
are all patients I've seen recently. And when people come
to me, I take notes and document what's happened, and
then I come to you and you'll learn everything about
that person, well except for their name, rank and serial number.
You'll know everything about that person that's important for you
to know, and that is what kind of person they are.
(04:38):
Where they came from, how they got this cancer if
we know, and then what happened to them, and that's
what we're going to talk about. And so it's kind
of like being in medical school for a medical student.
You get to learn, you get to be in the group.
You get to be in the medical group and learn
and learn how doctors talk and doctors think and what
happens elsewhere. It's a behind the scenes view, the only
(05:00):
such radio program in the world. So you have a
unique view at cancer care from a prospective of a
doctor in New York. And this is what we do
every day. This is what I do every day Monday
through Friday, and also on weekends and pretty much all
my waking hours. I'll talking about a man who came
(05:21):
to me seventy seven years old. He's married, had three children.
Came with his wife and his daughter. He had a
history of heart disease and heart failure and cardiac extents
and high blood pressure and COPD and cholesterol, and he
had history of cancer in the past. He had prosta
cancer in the past, and well he had had a
bladder cancer and he had treatment for the bladder cancer.
(05:46):
And while that was all being worked up, he was
found to have. The bladder cancer, by the way, was
a superficial cancer, not an invasive cancer, which doesn't need
the intensity of treatment of a deep invasive bladder cancer.
But of course treat invasive bladder cancers without cutting, without bleeding.
And it's so shocking because I see so many people
(06:06):
with bladder cancer and they're planning or they already had
radical surgeon. We're going to talk about that later in
the program. And they never were told by their surgeons
or their other doctors. They were never told. They tell
me that there were non invasive, highly successful treatments keeping
the bladder. Removing the bladder is a big deal. This
(06:27):
man had bladder cancer when he came to his but
it was superficial. It had prosta cancer was treated. Now
he comes to me, he was worked up and he
had a cat scan and the cat scan showed a
mass in the kidney. And often there's something called the
field defects of people that have cancers in the kidney
or urders or bladders have one in the other area.
(06:47):
And sure enough, this man had three cancers in the
field kidney, bladder, and prostate. He came to us and
he's a little bit chubby. He's an ex smoker at
a heart attack, and he's a bit overweight and a
bit incapacitated. It's hard for him to walk, it's hard
(07:07):
for him to move. And the doctors found this kidney
cancer and all they could think about is cutting out
his kidney. But the man didn't want is kidney cut out.
He did not probably think he would survive it. He
had COPD, he had shorts of breath, he walked with
a cane, he had heart failure, I had blood pressure COPD.
(07:28):
And he came to us and he wanted to learn
about options that weren't being offered at one of the
biggest super duper hospitals in the neighboring state, Connecticut. And
he came and we staged him up and elsewhere. There
was no biopsy. There was just a mass and they
wanted to cut out the kidney. And that's very common.
Most eurologists that I know about wanted to just cut
(07:50):
out the kidney. And they say, why cut it why biops,
you want I can just cut it out, Well, cut
it out, and that's half of your urinary system, that's
half of your kidney capacity in the garbage usually, and
I know they could say something's remove part of it,
but almost always so commonly, the whole kidney's removed. I
think it's easier for the surgeons had to say, it's
(08:11):
harder for the patient. And so this man had a
mass in the kidney. They had no biopsy, even with
heart failure and COPD, and he could barely walk, he
could barely move. The surgeon wanted to cut out his kidney.
And then he came to doctor Liederman at Radio Surgeon,
New York, and everything was upside down. Here. We don't
want to do anything except to inform you. We talk
(08:32):
about all the options. We talk about all the options
to everybody, and we talk about all the options to
this man. He was never told, hey, I can cut
out your kidney, but you may not survive it, and
you may not survive without this kidney, and you may
not survive with going through a big operation with all
your other heart disease and lung disease and heart failure.
(08:52):
And they never told him there's non invasive treatment. And
well he heard through the grapevine, like from a radio
listener like you on the radio, that there were non
invasive treatments for so many cancers that are here done
by doctor Liederman with experience over decades, forty thousand patients
(09:12):
treated over decades, and this man came to me. We
staged him up. We didn't want to make sure there
was any cancer that had traveled, and there was none.
And we offered a little tiny biopsy, which is a
tiny little needle and you're not obliged to have it,
but it's advisable. Most people want to know if they
have cancer or not. And he had the biopsy, and
(09:32):
he had the staging, and lucky for him, he had
no spread of his documented kidney cancer and he was
treated and recently he's come for follow up with new imaging,
non invasive imaging, and he remember never for his kidney cancer,
never had chemo and never had emotherapy, and never had surgery.
(09:54):
Only a tiny little biopsy, painless biopsy took minutes, and
then treatment with invisible beams. Invisible beams directed at that
kidney cancer and treatments take about ten minutes. We lined
up the beams, we set them in a stereotactic frame,
which is a unique system to hold the body in
position and to coordinate the body in the stereotactic frame,
(10:16):
which is an outside frame of reference and the cancer itself,
and we're able to send in beams just to hit
the cancer in this man who is chunky and heart
failure COPD could barely move. But he did not want
that cancer to exist in his body, and he did
not want to have surgery. He thought he would never
(10:36):
survive it. And furthermore, he didn't want to lose his kidney.
And he came here and was treated and treatments for
as I say, ten to fifteen minutes. Came in, got
his treatment, turned around, drove back to Connecticut, and now
back here for check up again. And check up shows
no cancer, totally obliterated by radio surgery. He has his kidney,
(11:00):
He has his function. Actually he said his function is
better than ever, his strength is better than ever. There
was no cutting, no bleeding, no anesthesia, no loss of
his kidney, which is so different than super duper places
that he saw elsewhere. And it's not only in Connecticut,
it's almost everywhere, it seems that surgeons want to remove
(11:20):
the kidney. And this is the work we do, non invasive,
no cutting, no bleeding, no removal of the kidney, with
high success rate and first in America, if most everyone
wants to go to the most experienced doctor you know.
Welcome to come and see the doctor first with body
Radio st in America, who's treated forty thousand patients with
(11:42):
high success rate or success rate for kidney cancer treatment,
whether it's in the kidney or even if it's travel
Doctor Ariol Liederman recently wrote a paper and presented one
of the largest cancer meetings of kidney cancer traveled till lung.
And we're able to treat kidney cancer in the kidney
or beyond with high success rate. Doctor Ario Liederman presented
(12:03):
his data at National Cancer Meeting showing a ninety four
percent durable success rate. And this is the work we do,
non invasive, no cutting, no bleeding here at Radio SIRTIT
in New York. And I can tell you this man
was so happy, and his wife was so happy, and
his daughter was so happy, and his doctor two doctor Liederman,
(12:23):
was so happy. And the surgeon who wanted to do
that surgery, well he probably wasn't so happy. I'm doctor Liederman,
thirteen eighty four, Broadway Radio SURT in New York. You
can call us if one information. You're welcome to do that.
If you have questions. It's always best to meet in
person with the patient and medical records together. It's always
(12:44):
best to meet in person. That's the best way. Doctors
and patients have known that for hundreds, probably thousands of years.
My name is doctor Liederman. Who want information or appointment?
You can call us if you wish at two and
two choices two and two two four six, four two
three seven, two and two two four six forty two
(13:04):
thirty seven. My name's doctor Liederman, here for you, Thank you,
and we'll be right back.
Speaker 5 (13:09):
Many people with cancer come to doctor Liederman when surgery
didn't help and toxic chemo stopped working. Many come in pain.
Many people with cancer come to doctor Liederman when their
caregiver has no more care to offer. Doctor Liederman bringing
innovative cancer care for decades. When the next cancer drug
is not as promised, when surgery was the fail to pass,
(13:32):
we may be able to offer you new cancer treatment options.
We treat new and recurrent cancers, small or large, most
anywhere in the body, even if prior chemo, radiation or
surgery didn't work. Call doctor Liederman two and two choices
two and two choices for a free booklet DVD thirty
eighth and Broadway, most insurances, Medicare, Medicaid accepted, Harvard trained,
(13:56):
triple board certified Doctor Liederman two and two choices two
on two choices for innovative cancer treatment, best is to
meet doctor Liederman in person. Call two and two choices
two and two choices.
Speaker 3 (14:10):
World's most protected man's prostate cancer missed in and out
of White House for sixteen years. No recent PSA now
stage four Gleason nine prostate cancer spread to his bones.
No expense spared yet missed. Data shows men's screened for
prostate cancer have twenty percent better survival. Missing screening means
(14:31):
forty five percent higher death rate. White House doctors versus
doctor Liederman. Nine thousand prostate cancers treated for cure over decades.
High success rate for cures, high quality of life, generally
avoiding surgery's failures and complications. Presidential care versus doctor Liederman,
Harvard train, triple board certified, most insurances, Medicare, Medicaid accepted,
(14:56):
called two and two choices two and two choices. Meet
doctor Liederman. Thirteen eighty four Broadway at thirty eight, conveniently
located just hours north of the White House. Get well,
mister President, Welcome back, to the Radio Surgery Hour.
Speaker 4 (15:12):
This is Rob Redstone here with doctor Gil Leiderman at
the WR Studios in the hearts of New York City
for just a few steps from the radio surgery in
New York Cancer Treatment Center on Broadway in thirty eighth Street.
Doctor Liederman, the leading cancer expert, treats prostate cancer not invasively.
He was the first in New York with fractionated brain
radio surgery, and he's the first in America and in
(15:32):
the Western Hemisphere with body radio surgery. You can also
call doctor Liderman at two and two Choices for a
free informative booklet and DVD. Hey, doctor Liederman, we're back.
Speaker 3 (15:43):
We are back. I want to talk about another man
from Connecticut. Sixty nine year old man. He's married, he
has a family. He came desperate, another desperate man from Connecticut.
He had a history of tonsil cancer, so he's got
a cancer of the tonsils. He was a smoker. All
it's another reminder if you're smoking, please stop. If you
(16:03):
have loved when smoking, please encourage him to stop. Please
never start so risky. Anyway, this man had a tonsil
cancer and he had radiation and another facility in Connecticut,
and he had a kidney cancer, which is also related
to smoking. So he's already had two cancers related to smoking,
tonsil cancer, throat cancer and kidney cancer. And now he
(16:27):
has a third cancer. And third cancer was in the
pireform sinus, So the tonsils up towards the top of
the mouth by the back of the tongue, and the
peeriform sinus is towards the bottom, by the bottom of
the tongue and by the voice box. And he went
to his doctors at the biggest places in Connecticut, the
most famous, super duper places, and they buy up seed
(16:49):
his puriform sinus, and they told him that the only
treatment he could have because he had prior radiation, would
be a radical surgery removing his voice box and part
of his trake and part of his neck. They were
going to remove, do radical surgery on his neck and
his voicebox, remove his voicebox. He would never speak again, normally,
(17:10):
he would never breathe again. Normally he'd breathe through a
little hole at the bottom of his neck. And he
was desperate, and he came to me. He has vascular disease.
Vascular disease is also from smoking. So if you need
a poster boy why not to smoke? As this man
three cancers and he came to his loved one. He
had a girlfriend who loved him. He has one child,
(17:31):
and he is an ex smoker. He's also diabetic, and
he has this third cancer in the puriform sinus that
spread to the nodes. And he was told it this
super Duper Pooper Scooper Place, that he only can have
radical surgery removing his voicebox, having a trake, so he'd
never breathe or speak normally again. And he was desperate,
(17:56):
and we got all the records together, and because we
are able to do the delicate work that apparently was
not thought of or was not available at super Duper General,
we're able to ascertain that there was a significant distance
between the radiation he had elsewhere for the tonso and
what we would need to do to radiate his pureiform sinus.
(18:18):
And he was desperate and eager to do everything he
could to save his voicebox and to save his breathing
and not to have radical surgery on his neck or
on his trake or on his voice box. And he
came and he completed therapy. We're able to treat him
with no side effects and so incredible. We were able
(18:38):
to treat him with no side effects and he's doing
great and feeling great. When others, super duper general said impossible,
they came to doctor Liederman and the impossible we determined
was possible. And that's so often the case. So many
people come and they say, oh, my doctor told me
you can't do it, so I'm not even going to come.
(18:59):
I'm not even going to come because my doctor told
him I'm not going to come. Well, this man was
so desperate because the opposite what was available there, removing
his voice box, putting a trake in so another breathe
or speak again in a normal way and we're dissecting
out his neck notes was so devastating. He was compelled
not to believe his doctors. And it's another reason why
(19:21):
it'd be great if you're interested, is to get a
second opinion in person, and that's the only way we
do it. Sometimes people are a little bit wanting to
cut corners and coughing, can you treat my peer form sign? Well? No,
it took hours and hours of us to work to
determine look at the fields, look at the documents, and
(19:44):
determine that we could safely do it. And this is
the work we do. But for a patient, patient needs
to show up, bring records if possible, Otherwise we will
get the records and we review the case and we
try to see everyone in a timely fashion, probably to
anyone else, but it's worthwhile if you want a fresh
second opinion, to get a fresh second opinion. If you
(20:06):
want the same old opinion, then you'll be stuck with
the same old opinion. The first man would have been
stuck with losing his kidney. This man would have been
stuck with losing his voicebox because he went to the
biggest places and they told him you had to have surgery.
And when he came to see doctor Liederman, he discovered
that there were other options that he wasn't being told about.
(20:27):
And this is the work that we do every day.
At thirteen eighty four Broadway, Broadway through the eighth Street
in the heart of New York City. I'm going to
talk about another patient. This is a man who had
a bladder cancer another story I said alluded to earlier.
And he's a seventy six year old man. He was
born in the Saint Petersburg Soviet Union's He is married
(20:51):
He has a son. He lives in Brooklyn. He had
blood in the year and of a year and a
half ago. It was seen by doctors who was determined
he had an invasive bladder cancer. And he went to
the surgeons at Super Duper General and they started him
on chemo and he had surgery and they removed his bladder.
He had a prolonged recovery, got infected. He had terrible
(21:14):
infection after the surgery. He lost his bladder. When they
removed the bladder takes away not only the bladder and
the prostate, so the sex life is capute. He was
not able to urinate normally. He has to urinate through
a tube or a bag. Then he got infected from
the big operation, was in the hospital for months. Then
he had chemotherapy. It didn't work, and then they offered
(21:35):
a clinical trial, which is like experimental and he just
didn't want to be a guinea pig. He did not
want to volunteer. He wanted some treatment that would offer
him a chance to work. And he came here. He
was at one of the biggest, super most famous places
in America and he just walked away. He had had
surgery there, he had chemo there. He had immunotherapy there
(21:57):
and nothing worked. The cancer just grew bad right whether
they remved the bladder, came back right in the palvis,
huge mass where the bladder used to be. Huge masses
of cancer had spread in the pelvic area, and he
came to us desperate for a second opinion. He did
not want to go on a clinical trial. Clinical trials
(22:17):
don't really have any chance of durability in general, or
very small. The success of cancer patients with clinical trials
is about five percent if you look at the data,
meaning ninety five percent of people, there's not success. So
why would you want to do something that is so
odds against you. He had already had the usual treatment.
(22:37):
He went to a super duper place. They removed his bladder,
they gave him chemo, they gave real therapy. Nothing worked.
The cancer just kept growing back and back and back.
And he came here and we talked about all the options,
and we talked about options that they never told him elsewhere.
And he was treated here. He finished the treatment, We
scanned him up and he's in remission. Already already in
(23:02):
remission when he had surgery. The cancer came back when
he had chemo, the cancer came back. We had hemotherapy,
the cancer came back. And now radio surgery Doctor Liederman
with forty thousand patients treated over decades with high success
where we attack the cancer. And this man with bladder
cancer that recurred, huge mass in the palvis, huge masses
(23:24):
into the lymph nodes and the jacent areas. Now all
are in remission and no spread of the cancer with
radio surgery only. No chemo with us, no heminotherapy with us,
no surgery with us. All out patient walks in the door,
gets a treatment and goes home every day. And that's
how it is so easy for him, well tolerated for him.
(23:46):
He'd come in with his wife, walk in, have a treatment,
turn around and go home. And this is the work
that we do every day at thirteen eighty four Broadway
Broadway in thirty eighth Street, in the heart of New
York City, with a huge experience over decades. I want
to talk about a man who's a musician. He's a
famous musician. And if you listen to our prostate DVD,
(24:08):
and if you don't have it, we'll send it to you.
My name's doctor Liederman. You can call us even now
or tonight or never. If you want to get a
DVD and listen to this man's beautiful music. He sings,
he composes, He's gone around the world writing and singing
beautiful music. This man came to us a decade ago
as a seventy three year old. He's a black man.
(24:30):
We know in the black community there's high rates of
prostate cancer. One in six black men will get prostate cancer.
One in twenty three will die of prostate cancer. It's
almost twice the rate of death compared to other groups.
Why are we talking about that? It was a warning
sign actually to any man, any man of any race
or religion, or creed or color, can have prostate cancer
(24:51):
and you get checked. You heard my little advertisement about
President Biden. Men that get screened have twenty percent less
death from prostate cancer. Man who don't get screened have
forty five percent more death. So there's lots of reasons
to make an appointment. Two and two choices. Two and
two choices make a data come in. If you wish,
(25:14):
it may well save your life. Statistically, you have a
great chance of saving your life. Just call us at
two and two choices. This man came to us a
decade ago, he came on his own. He was born
in Alabama. He was seventy three years old. He's got
three children. He had no family history. Let's be think, Oh,
I have no family history, I'm safe. This man had
(25:35):
no family history. He was urinating three times a night.
We offered a medicine. His way was two point fifteen
six feet, big man, beautiful, beautiful voice. And this is
the work that we do every day. His father died
of a heart attack. His mother died of a stroke.
He went to one of the biggest hospitals in New York.
He just didn't like what they told him. He didn't
(25:56):
like I was treated. He came hereus pysician. I examined him.
He had some leg swelling. We took care of that.
We examined him. He had a large prostate. He had
a stage T one c glease in seven, which is
a more aggressive cancer. And a decade ago he was treated.
And now PSA and this famous beautiful musician you can
(26:19):
hear play his music every week in New York City.
PSA is now zero with no chemo, no hormones, no cutting,
no surgery, only treatment outpatient Here at Radio sirty, New
York with nine thousand men treated for cure for prostate cancer.
(26:40):
Huge experience, high success rate. We can send you information.
We have excellent information to send you if you wish,
give us a call at two and two choices. If
you wish, make a date and be seen. If you
wish or not, whatever you But if you be seen
and get checked out, you lower your chance of death
by twenty percent. If you don't, don't show up, no screening,
(27:02):
forty five percent more death. So there's lots of reasons
to be seen. This man is singing every week. He's
carrying on in a beautiful way, happy, beautiful, talented man
now cancer free. And this is the work that we
do every day at thirteen eighty four Broadway Broadway in
(27:23):
thirty eighth Street in the heart of New York City.
But another man came from Trinidad, a fifty nine year
old man married with four children with high blood pressure.
On medication, he had a high PSAs. PSA was seven.
He went to a hospital in a neighboring borough and
then he went to a big hospital. He had a
(27:43):
glease in seven cancers. PSA was nine point one two.
His weight was one hundred and eighty three pounds two
years ago now it's one seventy. He had no treatment
when he came to us, but he didn't like what
was being proposed. He wanted to do other treatment elsewhere.
He just didn't like removing the prostate. He knows with
removing the prostate, most likely to be impotent, losing his erections,
(28:06):
most likely penis would be shortened, most likely to be
leaking urine. He just did not like that. I examined him.
He had a boggy prostate T one c glease in
seven PSA nine point one, nine years ago. Treated cancer free.
And this is the work that we do every day
(28:27):
at thirty eighty four Broadway Broadway in thirty eighth during
the heart of New York City, where we accept most insurances, Medicare, Medicaid.
Give us a call if you want two and two choices,
two and two choices, two and two choices. It's two
and two because it's Manhattan and choices like so many
of our patients have choices, like the man who could
have lost his kidney, but he came to us. Are
(28:49):
the man who lost his bladder and the cancer came
right back, came to us. Now in remission, there's so
many examples, and this is what we talk about every day,
the work that we do of our patient and what's
happened to them and how they got to us, and
what happens before and afterwards. My name is doctor Liederman.
Will be right back. Thank you, God, bless you.
Speaker 6 (29:08):
It's Johnny Bragg's talking prostate cancer. Twenty years ago. I
came to doctor Leederman with prostate cancer. It was serious.
My stepfather died days after prostate surgery. My uncle never
recovered from prostate surgery. I came to doctor Leiderman with
prostate cancer and high PSA. Doctor Liederman explained all options,
(29:29):
shared his and comparison results. I trusted doctor Leederman twenty
years ago. Today I trust doctor Leederman even more. My
prostate cancer is gone, my PSA is zero, my quality
of life is great. You can trust doctor Leederman too.
Like me for over twenty years, called doctor Leederman for
(29:51):
prostate cancer. Two one two choices. That's two one two choices.
Thirteen eighty four Broadway at thirty eighth Street in Manhattan.
Most insurance, Medicare, Medicaid accepted. Call doctor Leederman two and
two choices.
Speaker 3 (30:07):
It's doctor Leederman with Calvin West singing and writing about
his cancer treatment.
Speaker 7 (30:14):
I had cancer and my home was upside Now at
the radio, Sarge, you read my choices. I'm so glad
that we do. You want to thank lead photo phone
(30:41):
me and you you get your catser. It's not counting
two one, two three, well side, no more paper is
reading your brand daddy?
Speaker 3 (30:57):
Such you free? Can't you treatment? Call doctor Leederman two
and two choices, two and two choices, Call doctor Liederman.
Speaker 4 (31:05):
Welcome back to the Radio Surgery Hour. This is Rob
Redstone here with doctor Gil Liederman at the WR Studios
in the hearts of New York City. Were just a
few steps from the Radio Surgery in New York Cancer
Treatment Center on Broadway in thirty eighth Street. Doctor Liederman,
the leading cancer expert, treats prostate cancer non invasively. He
was the first in New York with fractionated brain radio surgery,
(31:26):
and he's the first in America and in the Western
Hemisphere with body radio surgery. You can also call doctor
Liederman at two and two choices for a free informative
booklet and DVD.
Speaker 3 (31:36):
Hey doctor Leiderman, We're back, We are back. I want
to take a minute just to introduce myself. My name
is doctor Gil Liederman. I promised i'd do that earlier
in the show. I was born and raised in Waterloo, Iowa.
Went to public school, University Medical School MD at twenty five,
real doctor MD at twenty five, like my wonderful brother
doctor Ted Liederman, MD at twenty five, and my great
(31:58):
fantastic son, doctor are Leaderman MD at twenty five three
doctor Liderman's all mds at twenty five. Ariel Leaderman board certified,
top notch cancer doctor here at thirtyty four Broadway with
me seeing patients, trained at the most famous hospitals and
facilities across the country, MD board certified here loving caring, compulsive,
(32:21):
thoughtful doctor caring for his patients. Great doctor, and you're
lucky to have doctor Ariel Leaderman to be your doctor.
He trained at famous places, Knowledgeable, thoughtful, innovative. That's doctor
Ariel Leederman, thirty four Broadway. Give him a call at
two and two choices, two and two choices. I went
(32:42):
on after MD to train internal medicine for three years
the University of Chicago. Michael Reese then went on to
Harvard Medical School. Dana Farber, trained in medical oncology, gave
chemo and treated cancer patients for years there was on
the staff there, Board certified, and then went on at
Harvard Medical School Joint Center for Edition Therapy, Famous Radiation Center,
(33:04):
trained for three more years three more years total training
nine years after medical school triple board certified. The only
Harvard trained Triple Board certified radiation doctor in New York
and one of the few in the world. Here for you,
accepting your insurances Medicare, Medicaid and most general insurances. If
(33:26):
you wish, you're welcome to come. Thirteen eighty four Broadway.
We have an extensive experience, first in America, first in
the Western Hemisphere with body radio surgery, huge experience, first
in New York with brain radio surgery for treatment of
brain tumors and brain cancers. Huge experience over four decades
since nineteen eighty six. And that's the work we do.
(33:49):
That's who I am. And you're welcome to one more thing.
Tune in to WR today. We're here live until two
o'clock and you can call us at one eight hundred
three two one zero seven ten again one eight hundred
three two one zero seven ten. If you have a question.
We are live, so you don't have to be bashful.
We want to embarrass you. One eight hundred three two
(34:11):
one zero seven ten or if you want, you can
also call and make an appointment two and two choices.
That's our office numbers. You have the studio number and
our office number. We are alive today till two. We're
here every day of the week and on Saturdays, we're
here from eleven am to noon, from one pm to two,
(34:32):
from three pm to four pm, and from five pm
to six pm. Every Saturday and every Sunday we're here
from eleven am to noon and from one to two pm,
and every night at midnight every night, and many people
like to go to bed with doctor Liederman. Many people
like to wake up with doctor Liederman. Many people like
(34:52):
to work with doctor Liederman. And we're actually between Saunday
night and Sunday. We're on from midnight to about four am.
So lots of shows, lots to learn. All the shows
are different and there's lots to learn. And if you
have questions, you can email me. Email is Gil at
RSNY dot org. Again, you can email me at Gil
(35:14):
at RSNY dot org. Best is to make an appointment
if you have a medical cancer question, you want to
get checked up. Who I know about your breast or
your lung, or mammogram or colonoscopy or prostate, Give us
a call and meet. That's the best way is to meet.
I want to talk about a woman, incredible story. Forty
(35:35):
eight year old, beautiful woman. She has three children. She
was diagnosed with emilio blastoma. She's had abnormalities for twenty years.
She had a mass in the jaw getting bigger and
bigger and bigger. First her doctors thought it was an abscess.
They gave her antibiotics. Then she had an opening in
the gum, getting bigger and bigger. She saw a dentist,
she had an X ray. There was a defect in
(35:57):
the mandibo. She eventually had a bid one of the
biggest hospitals in New York. It was called amilio blastoma.
She was seen by surgeons, surgeons who wanted to remove
her mandible, her mandible or teeth in half of her mouth.
This is a beautiful woman. She's an actress and a
singer and a teacher. And about the last thing anybody
(36:17):
would want is to remove the mandible and half the mouth.
And she sought other opinions, and she learned about doctor Liederman.
She learned about our experience treating emilio blastomas and the
beauty of our experiences. We have forty thousand patients treated
over decades, probably more than anyone else. Huge experience, huge experience.
(36:41):
All our doctors at Super Duper General told her she
had to have surgery, She had to remove the jaw,
she had to remove her mouth. This is a beautiful
actress and singer and mother, and about the last thing
anyone would want to do is to remove her mandibo
and mouth and jaw. And she came and I met her,
and she had a huge mass. The whole jaw was massive,
(37:05):
swown up with this tumor. All the teeth were myths
aligned because the tumor was just eating through the teeth
and the mandible and all her tissues in the right
side of her jaw, a lower part of the mouth,
and they were going to remove all that. And then
she learned about our experience over decades treating amelio blestomas.
(37:26):
And again we have a huge experience treating common cancers
like brain cancers and lung cancers and breast cancers and pancreas,
and liver and prostate and bladder, and gynecologic and gastroentrology, colorecto,
even sarcomas, but also a huge experience treating rare tumors
like her emilio blestoma. That's the benefit of coming here
(37:49):
to how the experience of a doctor with such a
huge experience. And I can tell you that she is
so grateful and so happy, and that mass has receded
and her teeth have gone, and she has the most
beautiful mouth that I've ever seen. How she cares for herself,
and how the radiation left her radio surgery to the
(38:09):
mandible and this mass, it was huge and deforming. And
she's a single woman. She was embarrassed to meet men,
and now all of a sudden she's dating and happy
and the new beginning for her when she thought the
end was closing in on her. So happy and so
grateful that we're able to help her, and grateful to
(38:30):
hear her words which are so beautiful. And this is
the work that we do every day at thirteen eighty
four Broadway, with a huge experience over decades. Every day,
every day we see patients, new and recurrent people come
back for checkups. Now I talk about a woman who
had a cervix cancer, seventy three years old from Jamaica.
(38:53):
We see many many Jamaicans and Caribbeans. Some of the
greatest rates of cancer are in Jamaica and the Caribbean.
That's why so many people come to us. She's a
seventy three year old black woman, married with five children.
She came with her husband. She had high blood pressure
and cholesterol. She had cervix cancer. She went to one
of the biggest hospitals and they gave her chemo and
(39:15):
standard radiation. They put radiation from the outside, they put
radiation in the vagina, and none of it worked. None
of it worked, and the cancer came right back in
the palvis, right back in the palvis. And they told
her she had stage four cancer. It's incurable, she has
(39:36):
to have chemo for the rest of her life. And
she just didn't like that story. She didn't like what
she was being told, and she came here for her
fresh second opinion. Even though she had extensive treatment, extensive
chemo and extensive radiation, she did have recurrence, and we
proved that to her and we were offered We were
able to offer her innovative treatment unlike what she had
(39:58):
her standard radiation. There's such a huge difference between pinpoint
treatment and standard treatment, and we were able to offer
her innovative treatment even though she had chemo and radiation elsewhere.
It didn't work. She was left with stage four cancer.
She came to me five years ago and we were
able to treat her metastatic cancer. And now five years
(40:20):
later she's cancer free. Only with our treatment five years ago,
no chemo, no cutting, no surgery, no hospitals, no anesthesia,
just innovative treatment with doctor Liederman. When she was told
elsewhere it wasn't possible, well, it was not only possible,
like you've heard so many stories today, not possible. Like
(40:41):
the matter, the bladder cancer came back after bladder surgery
and chemo in remission. Now the man with kidney cancers
told he had to have his kidney removed came here
non invasive treatment. The woman with emilioblastoma and so on.
Here's the one with gynaecologic cancer had chemo radiation elsewhere,
(41:02):
cancer came back stage four. Now cancer free five years
later after doctor Liederman only And when to talk about
a man he's fifty seven years old from Mauritania. He's married,
has two children. He came with a higher risk cancer
prostate PSA ten gleason seven. He had ten of twelve
(41:23):
cores so when he was biopsied, so spring loaded gun
twelve little needles. When his prostate ten of the twelve
showed cancer. He's waking up five times a night to urinate.
We offered a me for that. He is also an
ex smoker. He'd never been hospitalized to hear it was
here from Africa and we treated him. He had a
(41:46):
large prostate. His prostate was huge, scus of salcus huge
like a hardball. So it's a huge prostate, high PSA,
PSA ten and Gleason seven, multiple cores positive. And he
was treated eight and a half years ago, eight and
a half years ago, born in Mauritania, eight and a
(42:06):
half years ago. Now cancer free. And this is the
work that we do every day. We have extensive information
about most cancers. We're happy to send it to you
no charge and call us even now at two and
two choices two and two two four six forty two
thirty seven. You can email me email at Gilgil at
(42:27):
RSNY dot org or come in many people by the
way come in. Our office is near Times Square in
Macy's is about half a million people every day in
our neighborhood. So many people pop in and get information
for themselves and for their loved ones. We have package
of information to send you, whether it's about brain tumors
and brain cancers, or lung cancers, or breast cancers, a
(42:50):
domino cancers, prostate cancers, skin cancers. There's three million skin
cancers a year. And sad to say, most people are
told to have radical surgery for their skin cancer. And
most people I know just do not want to have
deforming radical surgery on their eyes, their nose, their mouth,
(43:11):
their hands, their feet, their arms, their legs, their trunk
when they can have non invasive treatment with high success.
And this is the work that we do every day
at thirteen eighty four Broadway Broadway in thirty eighth Street
in the heart of New York City. I'm doctor Liederman.
We'll be right back.
Speaker 8 (43:30):
Did you know that you've got choices that there can
be a bad way. Did you know that you've got choices?
Speaker 5 (43:43):
Conductor?
Speaker 8 (43:43):
They don't mean today to want to choices is a
much bad way too want too choice says conductor. They
don't mean today. Did you know that you've got choices?
Speaker 4 (44:02):
That there can.
Speaker 1 (44:03):
Be a bad way.
Speaker 8 (44:06):
Did you know that you got choices? Conductor leader means today,
who want you choices? A much bad way?
Speaker 5 (44:19):
Who wants you choice?
Speaker 8 (44:21):
Says conductor, Leader means today.
Speaker 3 (44:27):
Doctor Leederman Cancer Treatment, thirteen eighty four Broadway, hard to believe.
President Biden, now diagnosed with aggressive Gleason nine stage four
prostate cancer spread to his bones, met with doctors repeatedly.
While VP private citizen, President would decline simple tests to
diagnose early prostate cancer where risk explain, makes no sense
(44:50):
to decline easy test to try to save one's life.
Care so different With doctor Liederman. We try to anticipate
screening saves live. A different experience, whether for prostate long
brass colorecto newer recurrent cancer at thirteen eighty four Broadway
with doctor Leiderman worthwhile for the President likely you too
(45:12):
meet doctor Liederman, new York's only Harvard trained, Triple Board
certified radiation oncologist. Most insurances Medicare, Medicaid accepted doctor Liederman.
Two and two choices, two and two choices. Simple tests
may save lives yours two called doctor Leiderman two and
two Choices.
Speaker 4 (45:31):
Welcome back to the Radio Surgery Hour. This is Rob
Redstone here with doctor Gil Leiderman at the WR Studios
in the hearts of New York City for just a
few steps from the Radiosurgery New York Cancer Treatment Center
on Broadway in thirty eighth Street. Doctor Leederman, the leading
cancer expert treat prostate cancer not invasively. He was the
first in New York with fractionated brain radio surgery, and
(45:52):
he's the first in America and in the Western Hemisphere
with body radio surgery. You can also call doctor Liderman
at two and two choices for a reinformative booklet and DVD. Hey,
doctor Liederman, we're back, We are.
Speaker 3 (46:05):
Back, and we're here for you. I want to talk
about a gentleman who sixty seven years old, came with
prostate cancer Gleason seven. He had two of eight course positive.
He had a PSA that was six point eight. He
had the second biopsy of his life and he had
Gleason seven cancer. So it's another teaching point. Just because
he had a biopsy a year ago or five years ago.
(46:26):
There's different ways of doing biopsies, and there's better ways
of doing biopsies to get to the answer. So this
man had a negative biopsy before we arranged for a
repeat biopsy. He was Gleason seven. He had two of
eight course positive. He had a high PSA. His MRI
was py red five. There's a scale MRIs are done
(46:47):
to look at prostate to see the chance of having cancer.
Scale goes py red one to five. One is the best,
five is the worst. Five means almost definitely have cancer.
He had py red five. Seven year old man born
in New York City, single. He worked in the communication
industry at high blood pressure and he was found to
(47:08):
have this cancer. And well, he came to me because
he just did not want to have surgery. He did
not want to have no treatment. He had painting his
penis for three years. He had noctoria, which is means
he was waking up to urinate. He was on medications.
His way it was two oh five is six feet.
His vision is okay, had no fevers, chills. He had
(47:31):
no family history except an uncle. An uncle had prostate
cancer and I examined him and he had enlarged, boggy prostate.
His PSA was went from two point three up to
six point eight, so it increased by fifty percent over
a short period of time. Gleason seven, and well, I
saw him ten years ago and treated him ten years ago.
(47:55):
Now ten years later, his PSA is down to zero.
The height his PSA was twelve before treatment. Now it's zero.
So a great success. A decade later, doing great, feeling
great fully, intact, urinating normally, sexual life normal, which is
so different, so different than what would have happened had
(48:17):
he had surgery. And we'll talk about a man who
came to us from Haiti, sixty seven year old black man.
He had a twin sister. I saw his twin sister.
I saw him. He was diagnosed with prostate cancer one
of the big hospitals in New York ten years ago.
Exactly ten years ago, he was found that have prostate
cancer and was urinating poorly. His urination improved with medicine,
(48:40):
but his PSA was high. His PSA was five point seven.
He had a biopsy Gleason seven cancer. His bowels were fine.
He was on medicine for the prostate urination issues. He
had no family history, had a twin sister which we
saw the same day as him, examined him, offered all
the options, and now ten years later, his PSA is zero.
(49:04):
He's cancer free, doing great, happy. This is the work
that we do every day at thirty four Broadway. We
have a lot of information to send you, a lot
to talk about. Most men need to get checked up.
If you don't have cancer, you need a screening. If
you do have cancer, it's probably a good time to
meet doctor Liederman as well. I want to talk about
(49:26):
a woman from Jamaica. She came with a breast mass,
a nine melimeter mass in the breast in on mammogram.
She had a biopsy and it was positive she had
invasive cancer, invasive cancer. She had both actually invasive cancer
and DCIS. Dcs is a doctor carstom in situ when
the cancer is in the milk DUCS, So she had
(49:47):
both DCIS and invasive cancer. He was seventy six years old.
She had diabetes. I saw her. I saw her mammogram
showed the lesion at the three o'clock position of the
left breast. She was advised to have a biopsy, which
she agreed to do, and her doctors wanted her to
do surgery on her breast and she just did not
(50:08):
want to do any surgery on the breast. We see
many many women who just do not want to have
surgery on their breast. And this woman was treated five
years ago. Five years ago we treated her for invasive
cancer and dcis to gather the breast. And now five
years later, she's cancer free, doing great, happy about her
(50:30):
good results, happy about her success, happy about cosmetic results,
happy about not being in a hospital, happy about no
cutting or bleeding, happy about our treatment, non invasive sending
invisible beams to treat the breast. And we have a
huge experience over decades. We have information to send you,
but again always best to meet in person to discuss
(50:53):
all your particular concerns and issues. And I can tell
you that ninety percent of the time that I meet
a patient. Time I meet a patient, we discovered things
that the patient themselves didn't know about themselves. So patients learn,
we learn, We all learn together to provide information during consultation.
And that's the work that we do. We do accept
(51:14):
with insurances, Medicare, Medicaid. We're located at thirteen eighty four
Broadway Broadway in thirty eighth Street in the heart of
New York City, just a little bit south of Times Square,
between Times Square and Macy's. It's easy to find us.
There's easy communication. There's fifteen subway lines one, two, three, four, five, six, AQABC, ACEE, B, MD,
(51:38):
seven S and Q N QR. Also so easy to
get to us. Stop at Times Square and just walk over.
It's a couple of minutes away. And all the buses
in New York City that come right to the Times
Square area, it's so easy to get to us. That's
where made our office in the heart of New York
City to be accessible. That's why we take most insurances
(51:58):
to be accessible in the radio, to educate, so that
you know all the options. You learn options that you
probably were never told elsewhere. They probably were hidden from
you elsewhere. This is the work that we do every
day at thirteen eighty four Broadway. Now I tell you
a remarkable story about a woman sixty five years old.
(52:19):
She's an irishwoman. She was marshall of the Saint Patti's
Day Parade and she has stage four cancer, cervix cancer
that traveled. She's been seen by a gynecologists for recently,
but not in ten years. She had vaginal bleeding throughout
her life. She came to us. She had stage for
(52:40):
cancer of the cervix. She was taking thailand on I
be profen for pain and she was recommended to have
chemotherapy she wanted to do. She was scheduled to be
seen at the biggest hospitals in New York about chemotherapy.
She just adamant not to have chemotherapy. She had advanced
cancer traveled to her abdomen, her liver, her lung. She
(53:03):
had stage four cervix cancer traveled. I met her years
ago and she decided to come here and she decided
never to have chemo or surgery, and surgery wouldn't have
really been appropriate because she had stage four cancer. Her
function was good, and we started treating her worst spots.
(53:23):
She had several spots. We always to start with the worst,
most painful, difficult bleeding spot, and that's where we start
with her. And she was so shocked that the bleeding
and the pain and the mass went away that she
wanted us to treat other areas too, and we've treated
other areas in her chest and abdomen and pelvis also.
She's never taken chemotherapy. Has stage four cancer. She's told
(53:46):
elsewhere she had weeks to live. Now it's two years later.
She's doing great. In fact, the most recent scans show
she's cancer. No cancer is visible, so she's doing great.
Imaging is great. She is great. She's active, she has
a loving family, she's active in her community, she's active
with her family, and she's so happy and grateful. And
(54:08):
we're grateful for her gratitude and grateful for her good
character and her smile and facing adversity. And now in
return we've given her cancer free. So currently she's cancer free.
Imaging say there's no cancer, even though she had cancer
treated in the pelvis, abdomen, liver, and chest. This is
the work that we do every day at thirteen eighty
(54:32):
for Broadway. My name is doctor Liederman. We have innovative
treatment available for cure or for treatment whenever possible. There's
a big difference. We like to see patients in person,
if you wish, that's the best way. We see patients
from around the world. We have patients now from Tel
Aviv and Taiwan and China and Bangladesh and beyond, as
(54:54):
well as all over America who come here for innovative
treatment that's often hidden elsewhere. Accept most insurances, Medicare, Medicaid.
We have lots of information. It's always best to meet
in person.
Speaker 4 (55:07):
Thanks for tuning in to the Radio Surgery Hour with
doctor Gil Leiderman and myself. If you have questions before
next week's show, or want a free informative booklet and DVD,
just contact doctor Liederman at two one two choices. That's
two one two two four six four two three seven.
That's two one two two four six four two three seven.
Speaker 2 (55:44):
For cancer treatment, most prefer effective, non invasive, well tolerated,
outpatient therapy. That's doctor Liederman, the radio surgery Pioneer's goal too.
Doctor Liederman is first in America, first in New York,
First for you with body radiosurgery. Doctor Leederman hits your
cancer with no cutting, no bleeding. Doctor Liderman has decades
of experience with primary and metastatic large or small cancers
(56:07):
from head to toe cancer treatment with possibly a second
chance for you. Meet doctor Leaderman to hit the cancer.
He's New York's only Harvard trained Triple Board certified radiation oncologist.
Call two one two choices, two one two choices to
meet doctor Liderman for a fresh second opinion. Most insurances, Medicare,
Medicaid accepted. Free booklet DVD two super convenient Broadway in
(56:30):
thirty eighth in Manhattan. Meet doctor Leaderman to hit your cancer.
Call two one two choices, two one two choices.
Speaker 3 (56:37):
Prostate cancer very common. Men's cancer worldwide will double by
twenty forty Thirty five thousand men die here annually from
prostate cancer. What to do? It's doctor Liderman with new news.
New data reveals testing reduces prostate cancer death by twenty percent.
Men's skipping testing have forty five percent more death from
(56:59):
prostate cancer. What to do? Come for prostate cancer screening
at Radio Surgery in New York with doctor Liederman. Easy
to save lives, reduce prostate cancer death, possibly yours or
your loved one. How visit doctor Liederman thirteen eighty four
Broadway called, two and two choices. Most insurances, Medicare, Medicaid accepted.
(57:22):
It's easy with doctor Liederman, New York's only Harvard trained
Triple Board certified radiation oncologist. Call doctor Liederman two and
two choices. It's easy with doctor Liederman. Trying to save lives,
call doctor Leiderman two and two choices.
Speaker 1 (57:37):
The proceeding was a paid podcast. iHeartRadio's hosting of this
podcast constitutes neither an endorsement of the products offered or
the ideas expressed.